A compendium of rare cross-cultural and historical accounts of extrasensory perception
• Provides accounts of ESP ranging from ancient Greek myth, traditional North and South American, African, and Polynesian stories to individuals like Rumi, Charles Dickens, and Carl Jung
• Considers unexplained ESP-related happenings, including bilocation, the ability to locate lost items, early knowledge of one’s own death, and perceptions regarding the well-being of loved ones
Whether a premonition of an impending event, a warning of potential danger, or an unlikely synchronistic experience, such things are surprisingly common, even if they often cannot be clearly explained.
Taking readers on a historical and cross-cultural voyage through extrasensory experiences, Daniel Bourke documents, contextualizes, and sheds light on these mysterious phenomena. From the plains of Peru and the haunted highlands of Scotland to the snowy taiga forests of the Far North and the Indigenous cultures of Australia and America, Bourke examines the strange psychic occurrences that seem to appear in all places, at all times. These include instances of bilocation, premonitions about the coming of visitors, intuitions of the location of lost items or treasures, the discovery of cures by telepathic means, and even accurate pre-perceptions about one’s own demise or the perilous situation of a loved one. He looks at the renowned Greek seers, including Iamos, who announced the death of Hercules at the moment it occurred; the far-reaching visions of the shaman in a trance who might warn his tribe of danger; and the witches, wizards, and heroes of legend and romance who were privy to secret knowledge through magical means. Bourke’s survey incorporates rare accounts from people all around the world and across the ages, including figures like Rumi, Saint Anthony, Charles Dickens, Mark Twain, and Carl Jung.
Shedding light on our cultural and mythic past, Bourke shows that wherever you look in the world, whatever culture or time, telepathic tales are unfolding all around us.
Foreword by Gregory Shushan, Ph.D.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Death, Life, and the Magic in the Mind
1 I Knew You Were Coming
Vardogers and Strange Knowledge
of a Visitor’s Arrival
2 I Knew You Were in Trouble
Historical and Cross-Cultural Visions
of a Distant Crisis
3 A Date with Destiny
Nearing-Death Awareness in
Legend, Lyric, and Lore
4 Discoveries at the Deathbed
Veridical Visions and Dreams of the Dying
5 Revenants, Wraiths, and Disinterested Shades
Vampires, Zombies, and Mysterious Knowledge
of a Distant Death
6 Treasure, Tombs, and Visionary Boons
Cross-Cultural ESP Involving Mysterious
Knowledge of an Item’s Location
7 I Knew the Cure
Sacred Healing, Other Worlds,
and the Origins of Botanical Knowledge
8 I Know What You Dreamed
Shared Visions, Double Revelations,
and Ultimate Truth
Epilogue
The Magic in the Mind
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Height:229
Width:152
Spine:23
Weight:379.00